The Wakefield 1 Line

The genealogy of the line of Farndales, descended from Thomas Farndale and Sarah Bell

 

Home Page

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Return to the Home Page of the Farndale Family Website

The Farndale Story

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The story of one family’s journey through two thousand years of British History

The Farndale Lineages

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The 84 family lines into which the family is divided. Meet the whole family and how the wider family is related

The Farndale Directory

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Members of the historical family ordered by date of birth

Themes

Links to other pages with historical research and related material

Related Family Stories

The story of the Bakers of Highfields, the Chapmans, and other related families

 

The genealogy of Robert Farndale who was brought up on Craggs Farm is now to be found as part of the Craggs Line.

 

This webpage comprises the genealogical family tree of the Wakefield 1 Line and then summarises the deeper ancestry of this line of the Farndales.

Thomas Farndale was born in 1839 near Whitby and moved to Wakefield where he was an inn keeper. He married Sarah Bell and they had five children including Joseph who became Chief Constable of Margate, York and Bradford and Traffic Commissioner for Yorkshire.

The family tree is colour coded to show the flow of relationships between individuals. You can also follow the hyperlinks in brown text to link directly to other related family lines and the hyperlink in blue text to reach the webpage of each individual, where you can read about their lives in more detail.

 

 

 

 

 

The Whitby 5 Line

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thomas Farndale

24 June 1839 to 22 December 1919

Married Sarah Bell in 1862, and then Alice Dowell in 1900

Innkeeper in Wakefield (Smith's Arms)

Newholm, Whitby, Eskdaleside, Wakefield, York, Scalby, Scarborough

FAR00344

 

 

 

 

 

?

 

 

 

 

 

 

John Farndale

1856 to 1922

Perhaps an early son of Thomas?

Monumental sculptor

Married Rose ? in early 1880s

Wakefield, Leeds

FAR00424

 

 

Thomas Dawson Farndale

29 October 1862 to 1940

A stone mason, clerk of works and civil engineer

Married Sarah Emily Davis in 1898 and Isabel E Yeoman in 1932

No children

Wakefield, Leeds, Plymouth, Louth

FAR00452

Joseph Farndale CBE KPM

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6 April 1864 to 22 February 1954

Chief Constable of Margate, York and Bradford. Traffic Commissioner for Yorkshire.

Married Emma Selby in 1883 and Maggie Emmott in 1937

Halifax, Wakefield, Margate, York, Claro, Bradford

FAR00463

Samuel Farndale

5 May 1866 to 14 July 1936

Married Pollie Chesters on 25 May 1895

Grandson of John Farndale (FAR00262) and lived with him for a time, Clerk of Portsea who later lived in London

Clerk of Portsea who later lived in London and worked in the civil service with the Admiralty rising from clerk to clerk to the engineer in chief

FAR00475

Margaret Farndale

20 March 1868 to 1955

Married James Smith Law

James Law was a publican like his father in law

They had three childrewn

Wakefield, York, Agbrigg

FAR00487

Henry Farndale

5 August 1870 to 1872

Wakefield

FAR00504

 

 

 

 

 

The London 1 Line

 

 

Henry Farndale

1883 to 1951

Solicitor’s clerk, engineer’s draughtsman, accountant

Regimental Quarter Master Sergeant in the Royal Field Artillery in WW1. He was gassed in 1917.

Married Grace Elizabeth Bell on 27 December 1913

Leeds

FAR00596B

 

John William Farndale

18 May 1886 to 29 June 1954

Married Dorothy Doris Chamberlain in 1916

Sorting clerk and leather salesman

Leeds, Leicester

FAR00615

 

Ethel Margaret Farndale

14 July 1889 to 1967

Shorthand clerk and secretary in the machine trade

Leeds, Wakefield

FAR00639A

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Leicester Line

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Florence Farndale

30 April 1884 to 10 November 1952

Married Charles Pickles (textile manufacturer) in 1911 (no family)

Halifax, Brierley, Bradford, Harrogate

FAR00600

Eveline Farndale

30 October 1885 to 30 October 1974

Halifax, Claro, Bradford, Harrogate

FAR00602

Emma Elsie Gladys Farndale

31 May 1893 to 14 April 1988

Married Percy Norwood twice in 1923 and remarried in 1949

Halifax, Bradford, Bulmer

FAR00657

 

 

Edward Francis Farndale

14 November 1914 to 21 November 2002

Architect’s assistant and machine tool inspector

Married Avril Green in 1947

Leeds, Liverpool, Boston and New York, Bournemouth, Ipswich

FAR00809

Henry Stewart Farndale

Instructor and pupil in front of a de Havilland Tiger Moth at No. 7 EFTS, Desford. Both wear 1930 Pattern flying suits.

1916 to 11 May 1945

Married Maria Patchett in 1940

Corporal in RAF, pilot under training who was killed when his tiger moth crashed in 1945

Bradford, Leeds, Meriden

FAR00832

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Bradford 3 Line

 

 

The family below are really only known through the record of Thomas Farndale who appears to have been related somehow to Joseph Farndale, the Chief Constable

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sarah Farndale

Born Old Kent Road

1842

Otherwise no record

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thomas Farndale

1877 to 19 December 1919

Brockley, Camberwell, Wandsworth

Store Fitter

FAR00547A

Florence Farndale

Born New Cross Surrey, 1877

General domestic servant

Marred James Simmons perhaps in 1949 at Paddington

But no record of birth

 

 

 

 

 

If you are subscribed to Ancestry you can also visit the Farndale Family Tree on Ancestry, which links the whole family together.

 

The Deeper Ancestry of the Wakefield 1 Line

The matrix below will transport descendants of the Wakefield 1 Line into a personal journey into their deep ancestry. It is an extract of the Farndale Story which is bespoke for the Wakefield 1 Line descendants. It will take you back to the earliest history of our ancestors and each box will transport you to a more detailed narrative to unlock your history.

 

 

 

Kirkdale Cave

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A Time Machine to a different era of geological time in the heart of our ancestral home

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Primeval Swamp

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The Iron Age, Bronze Age, Neolithic, and Mesolithic evidence of the people of the immediate vicinity to Farndale

 

 

 

Isurium Brigantum (Aldborough)

The Roman Regional Capital of the lands around Kirkdale

Hovingham

A Roman Villa on palatial scale just south of Kirkdale

Beadlam

A Roman Villa only 2km from Kirkdale in the heart of our ancestral lands

Roman Kirkdale

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71 CE to 580 CE

The lands which would become the lands of Kirkdale and Chirchebi in Roman and Pagan times

The Roman Arm Purse

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A Roman arm purse which can be seen in the British Museum in London today, found in about the second century CE by a cairn overlooking Farndale, which will transport you back 2,000 years

Eboracum (York)

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The Roman Capital of northern England where Constantine was proclaimed Emperor

 

 

 

 

Anglo Saxon Kirkdale

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560 CE to 793 CE

Kirkdale and the Chirchebi Estate in the Anglo Saxon Period

Anglo Saxon Kirkdale

Kirkdale from its founding in about 685 CE to the beginning of the Scandinavian period in about 800 CE

Eoforwic (York)

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Deirian and Northumbrian York, a political, cultural and educational Hub on the European stage

 

The Deira

The people who dominated our ancestral lands

Alcuin and the birth of modern education

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The world of Ecgbert and Aethelbert, successors to Bede, and their pupil Alcuin, who took York’s powerhouse of knowledge to the court of Charlemagne to pioneer the European educational system

 

 

Orm Gamalson

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The powerful figure at the heart of the aristocracy, who rebuilt Kirkdale and put our ancestral lands firmly onto the national political stage

Scandinavian Kirkdale

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793 CE to 1066

Kirkdale and the Chirchebi Estate in the Scandinavian Period

Anglo-Saxon-Scandinavian Kirkdale

Kirkdale in the Anglo-Saxon-Scandinavian period from about 800 CE to 1066, with a brief summary of its history through to 1500

Jorvik (York)

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The Scandinavian centre of northern England

The Kirkdale Sundial

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A unique treasure whose secrets transport us into the world of the eleventh century upon which you can stare today, imagining direct ancestors who did the same a thousand years ago

 

 

Norman Domination

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Regime Change

Game of Thrones

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1066 to 1200

The People of the Kirkbymoorside (“Chirchebi”) Estate after the Norman Conquest

Rievaulx Abbey

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This history of the Cistercian monastery of Rievaulx, in whose Chartulary the name Farndale was first recorded in 1154

 

 

The Pathfinders

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Our Pioneer ancestors who left Farndale but took its name to settle in new places

Poachers of Pickering Forest

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Tales of a surprisingly large number of our forebears who were poachers in Pickering Forest. Their archery skills would foretell the legends of Robin Hood and the English army at Agincourt

Medieval Farming

Sheep and Shepherds by MINIATURIST, English

Rural lifestyles from the Norman Conquest

The First Family Tree

A model which relies on extensive medieval evidence, to suggest the most probable family tree of the earliest ancestors of the Farndales

The Cradle

Thirteenth Century Farndale

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Clearing the dale to build our new home

 

The Story of Farndale to 1500

The story of the dale of Farndale to 1500, to accompany the family story

Medieval Warfare

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Tales of archers and men at arms who fought with Richard II, Henry IV and Henry V and an observation post in the home of the Nevilles and Richard III from which to view the Wars of the Roses

Campsall and Barnsdale Forest

The history of the village of Campsall north of Doncaster, where we find our ancestors in the sixteenth century

The History of Doncaster to 1500

The History of pre industrial Doncaster from its Roman inception as Danum to the end of the sixteenth century

The Vicar of Doncaster

The Family of William Farndale, the Fourteenth Century Vicar of Doncaster

The Kirkleatham Skelton Line

 

Arrival in the old Bruce lands around Skelton Castle

The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Families of Kirkleatham, Skelton, Moorsholm and Liverton in Cleveland

Kirkleatham

A history of Kirkleatham and Wilton, the place where our family first settled in Cleveland

 

 

 

 

The Liverton 2 Line

 

 

 

 

The Miners

The family story of mining, mainly for ironstone, the primary resource behind the industrial development of Cleveland

 

Transition to the Industrial Revolution

John Farndale, my great x2 uncle, was a prolific writer who captured the essence of the late eighteenth century and its transition into the Industrial Revolution. The family’s history provides a direct pathway to experience these years of momentous change

Brotton Old Graveyard

Three generations of Kilton Farndales in one place.

A side trip to nearby Boosbeck and Skelton take you to the gravestones two later generations. Take in Wensley and you’ll find two more recent generations.

Seven generations of the family in one short drive

The Kilton 1 Line

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The Farmers of Kilton

The First Hub

The story of the Kilton Farndales, a family who dominated a village, since lost to time, over two centuries

Kilton, the Lost Village

The story of the lost village of Kilton and its sylvan landscape

Kilton

A journey around modern Kilton, of farms, a ruined castle and a small village of Kilton Thorpe to capture the essence of the two century home of Farndales

The Smugglers of Old Saltburn

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Stories of smugglers, led by my great x3 grandfather known as the King of the Smugglers, and the undoubted involvement of our forebears

 

The History of Whitby to 1850

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A history of Whitby at the height of its maritime power in the eighteenth and nineteenth century, home to several large Farndale families.

A look back to the Anglo Saxon history of Whitby in the time of Celtic and Roman Christianity

A Perspective of Whitby

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The place of Dracula inspiration where many Farndales have been buried, provides a vantage point over Whitby, and its maritime activity

The Whitby 5 Line

 

The Victorian Policemen

To contrast with the medieval outlaw poachers of Pickering Forest, the story of the law makers including two influential Chief Constables and the real Inspector Foyle 

 

Joseph Farndale

1842 to 1901

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The Chief Victorian Constable of Birmingham who foiled a Jack the Ripper Hoax and played a key role in uncovering the Ledsam Dynamite Conspiracy

 

 

The Second World War soldiers, sailors and airmen

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The story of the Farndales who took up arms in the Second World War

The Second World War Soldiers

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The context of the Second World War

The First World War Soldiers

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The story of the many soldiers from the family who took up arms in the First World War

The First World War

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The context of the First World War to the Farndale Story

The Wakefield 1 Line

Joseph Farndale CBE KPM

1864 to 1954

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The Chief Constable of Bradford who pioneered the use of fingerprints, invented the police box, and played a key role in Bradford’s evolution at the start of the twentieth century